“My eldest daughter, Suldana, is in love with another woman. She is eighteen and she spends her days working at our kiosk selling milk and eggs, and at night she sneaks out and goes down to the beach to see her lover. She crawls back into bed at dawn, smelling of sea and salt and perfume. Suldana is beautiful and she wraps this beauty around herself like a shawl of stars. When she smiles her dimples deepen and you can’t help but be charmed. When she walks down the street men stare and whistle and ache. But they cannot have her. Every day marriage proposals arrive with offers of high dowries but I wave them away. We never talk about these things like mothers and daughters should; but I respect her privacy and I allow her to live.”
— – Diriye Osman, “Fairytales For Lost Children.” (via kuanios)
At this point in life the only acceptable careers for me are:
1. Village witch
2. Ornamental hermit
3. Holy Roman empress
4. Town crier
5. Delphian oracle
Do you know any traditional Celtic dishes for yule? Everything I found so far is just generic Christmas-y treats and someone adding a star or something and calling it Celtic.
Indeed I do, my friend! I have three lovely cookbooks in my collection which I highly recommend on the subject:
- Celtic Folklore Cooking (Joanne Asala)
- Witch in the Kitchen (Cait Johnson)
- The Food and Cooking of Ireland (Biddy White Lennon & Georgina Campbell)
Celtic Folklore Cooking includes an entire section in the index on dishes for Yule. The Food and Cooking of Ireland has a number of feast-worthy recipes, and a very informative foreword which describes the holiday traditions celebrated in Ireland today. Witch in the Kitchen has a lot of tasty vegetarian options for any occasion year-round.
Dishes for Yule include:
- Apple Fritters
- Baked Apples
- Chestnut Soup
- Chranachan
- Christmas Plum Pudding
- Eggnog
- Faerie Cakes
- Hot Buttered Rum
- Irish Stew
- Marmalade Loaf
- Mulled Cider
- Pan Haggerty
- Roast Goose with Stuffing
- Savory Yuletide Pie
- Shortbread
- Stuffed Acorn Squash
- Stuffed Braised Beef
- Tea Brack (aka Barm Brack)
- Wassail
Stay tuned, I’ll be posting the recipes for all of these throughout the day!
My listing of winter holiday recipes from last year, with entrees, desserts, drinks, and veggie options.
Enjoy, everyone! 🙂
Boop the snoot for kisses!
the Gentle Alien and their unidentified creature companion have a system worked out
which is which
the answer is within your heart
BNPs Being Racist and Transphobic
Apparently Max Dashu (TERF, runs the Suppressed Histories Archive) was disinvited from Pantheacon due to concerns that her transphobia would negatively impact trans people and there are a bunch of BNPs (Big Name Pagans) coming out of the woodwork to support her bigotry.
There’s also this white guy named “Utu Witchdoctor” who apparently started his own “underground railroad tradition” which “honors” Harriet Tubman, black folks were understandably upset by this and he was also disinvited from Pantheacon, so he’s been ranting about Dashu’s dismissal too.
Some of the names I’ve seen (taken from this Facebook thread), you can also find similar names on Dashu’s FB. This list also includes names from Dashu’s FB page:
Ellen Evert Hopman (author of A Druid’s Herbal, a bunch of other books, and that one fiction series that’s described as “Mists of Avalon but with druids” beginning with “Priestess of the Forest”)
Christian Day (everyone already knows he’s an ass for various reasons)
Oberon Zell (yes that Oberon Zell)
Dorothy Morrison (already appropriates hoodoo and stuff)
Rosemary Ellen Guiley
Thalia Took (I love her goddess art but fuck her)
I’m sure it’s a complete coincidence that most of the names on this list are Llewellyn authors.
Seriously though, these people all have pretty popular works and should be ashamed of themselves.
To borrow the Christian phrase, by their works ye shall know them
And this is the shit they see fit to get up to
Millennials are killing countless industries — but the Fed says it’s mostly just because they’re poor
The short version:
Millennials buy the exact same stuff as the previous generations, but less of it.
Me at 20: Everything costs too much.
Older generations: Well, stop buying so much stuff!
Me: Okay.
Older generations, ten years later: No wait, we fucked up.

Can you explain the Wild Hunt to me? I’m really curious about it. I keep seeing different people talk about it in different ways and I’m a bit confused.
you’re in luck–i actually spend a solid chunk of time earlier today explaining the wild hunt in my group chat. i’m going to paste that explanation here for you!
the wild hunt is a common folkloric archetype across most of europe which has also been brought over to the americas (mainly the united states). various different hunts have presence all across the celtic world, in germanic folklore, northern european folklore, spain, france, and many other places. the key feature of what makes a wild hunt a wild hunt is that they ride through the skies and on the wind and are usually in or accompanied by a storm. generally i have found that there are three main traits that characterize individual hunts: who the leader is, who the members are, and what its purpose is.
some classifications I’ve identified, with some examples–not every possible one, just something to give you an idea of what the descriptors mean:
the leader might be:
- a deity (manannán mac lir, woden, gwyn ap nudd)
- a folkloric hero (fionn mac cumhaill, king arthur, herne the hunter)
- a legendary ruler or a real ruler who was mythologized (herla, theoderic the great)
- the devil
- a saint
or there may be no leader, and the hunt be composed of a mob. if there is a leader, they are nearly always male, but not entirely always.
the members of the hunt might be:
- faeries
- the restless dead
- sinners specifically
- demons and/or devils
- the company of its leader (fionn’s fianna, king arthur’s knights)
- a company of legendary heroes, saints, or folkloric figures
the purpose of the hunt might be:
- rounding up the souls of the past year’s dead
- warning of the dead to come in the next year
- actually just hunting otherworldly game
- hunting humans to steal away to the otherworld
- collecting the souls of sinners and the damned
- punishing its members by forcing them to ride eternally with no rest
- literally just roaming around killing people
for the most part the wild hunt isn’t a mythological group, it’s folkloric–that is, not legends or myths or written literature, but the oral folk traditions and tales of the common people. this is what the american version of the wild hunt is–if you’ve ever heard the song ghost riders in the sky, it’s a piece of cowboy folklore that is fairly obviously derived from the wild hunt.
that’s the historical and folkloric information; the rest of this post is heavily upg-based, and entirely about my own experiences.
i deal with the irish hunts, which are largely faeries and/or the restless dead, and led by deities or mythological/otherworldly heroes. my personal perspective of the way the hunt works is that there are “local chapters” all around the world wherever faeries are found, and that the leader of each different hunt is a sort of “ultimate authority” over all hunts of that variety, and he chooses a new one to ride with each year.
i see most of the hunts as being a sort of unit of each local court–there are some fey who belong to the hunt and form the core of it, and then there are others who ride with it for a shorter period of time (a year, or seven years, or the like) who get the chance to join the hunt in recognition of some service or great deed.
my hunts are manannán’s, which is faeries and/or the restless dead collecting up the souls of the past year’s dead and warning of death to come, and sometimes taking people to the otherworld; nuada airgetlám’s, which is the tuatha dé danann and the aos sí hunting otherworldly game, and sometimes taking people to the otherworld; and the sluagh, a leaderless mob of faeries and/or the restless dead who just roam around the skies indiscriminately killing, maiming, and generally causing mayhem. manannán’s and nuada’s hunts are connected with the courts, while the sluagh I’ve always sort of thought of as being outside the courts–they’re exiles and solitaries and otherwise too antisocial to belong to a troop.
i hope that was helpful to you, and if you have any further questions feel free to ask!









